EU envoy expelled over Chavez ‘dictator’ jibe

Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, center, is flanked by Bolivia's Evo Morales, right, and Nicaragua's Daniel Ortega.
A European parliament envoy who was to serve as observer during the upcoming referendum on President Hugo Chavez’s term limits was expelled from Venezuela on Friday after calling Chavez a "dictator".

In a statement, Venezuela’s Foreign Ministry said it had “invited” Luis Herrero, a European Union parliamentarian from Spain, to leave the country in order to preserve a “peaceful climate” before the February 15 referendum. Venezuela’s Globovision television reported that Herrero was escorted to the Maiquetia airport on Friday by what appeared to be members of the national guard. “Following his comments, in a sequestering operation, they took him by force from the hotel without even allowing him to take his personal belongings and his passport,” opposition member Luis Ignacio Planas told Globovision. At about 10 p.m. after a discussion with other Euro parliamentarians, Venezuela’s national intelligence agency security officials went to Herrero’s room and asked him to leave, police officials told Globovision.

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During a press conference aired on Globovision Thursday, Herrero used harsh words against President Chavez’s handling of the referendum, implying the Venezuelan President was trying to manipulate the polling schedule to his benefit and called for Venezuelans to “vote freely.” “Don’t ever let fear obstruct your vote, as a dictator has premeditated,” Herrero said. Venezuelans will decide on Sunday whether to relax limits on re-election terms for Chavez. In September of 2008, Human Rights Watch executive director for Americas Jose Miguel Vivanco was also expelled for criticizing Chavez’s policies.

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Lebanon: Thousands mark Hariri’s assassination

Thousands of people gathered to mark the anniversary of Rafik Hariri's assassination.
Thousands gathered in downtown Beirut’s Martyrs’ Square Saturday to mark the fourth anniversary of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri’s assassination, a traumatic event in the nation’s post-civil war history.

Hariri died on Feb. 14, 2005 in a powerful explosion that left a 10-foot crater in a street in downtown Beirut, unleashing massive anti-Syria protests in what became known as the Cedar Revolution. A United Nations investigation by the Special Tribunal for Lebanon found links between Syria’s government and Hariri’s assassination, which led to widespread protests and eventually the withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon. On Saturday, somber words uttered from world leaders reaffirmed international commitment to Lebanon’s nation-building efforts. The United States pledged additional funds to support the tribunal’s efforts to find the masterminds behind Hariri’s assassination. “The United States is confident that the Special Tribunal for Lebanon will bring to justice those responsible for financing, planning, and carrying out the assassination of former Prime Minister Hariri,” said United States Secretary of State Hilary Rodham Clinton in a written statement.

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“The United States pledges $6 million for the second year of the Tribunal’s operations, subject to Congressional approval of the FY09 budget, in addition to the $14 million already contributed,” she said. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon said the anniversary comes two days before the new Special Tribunal takes over from the Beirut-based International Investigation Commission (IIIC), the legal body which also investigated links to 20 other attacks. Lebanon was engulfed in a sectarian civil war for 16 years (1975-1991), the longest of its kind in the Middle East, pitting Lebanon’s Shiite, Sunni, Druze and Alawite populations against each other. Saturday’s rally will include leaders of the March 14 Alliance, a coalition of anti-Syrian and independent parties who forged the Cedar Revolution, which prompted Syria to withdraw troops from Lebanon.

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Beckham’s move to Milan falls over

David Beckham has become a crowd favorite at the Rossoneri but he will be returning to LA.
David Beckham will rejoin LA Galaxy after his bid to remain with AC Milan fell over, according to a statement on the U.S. side’s Web site.

Beckham had indicated he wanted to stay with the Italian giants — where he is currently on loan till March 9 — and the club had reciprocated by saying they were keen on holding on to the 33-year-old. However, Galaxy general manager Bruce Arena said in a statement that the deal had fallen over after Milan failed to raise their offer. “(The) deadline imposed by Major League Soccer commissioner Don Garber regarding a resolution of David Beckham’s potential transfer to AC Milan has passed and we did not receive an acceptable offer for the player. “As a result, David remains an LA Galaxy player and we look forward to having him back with the club starting March 9,” Arena said. Beckham turned to AC Milan as he sought competitive match action to regain his place in the England squad under new coach Fabio Capello. Beckham’s multi-million dollar move to the MLS from Real Madrid in 2007 captured global headlines, but injury and then indifferent results from his Galaxy team encouraged media reports that the former England captain would abandon the U.S. experiment. Beckham has a five-year $125 million deal with Galaxy and a series of complex sponsorship arrangements.

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Policy review of war dead coverage nears end

The Pentagon is reviewing a policy barring media from viewing coffins of soldiers killed in combat.
A Pentagon review looking at allowing media coverage of the flag-draped coffins of fallen troops returning to the United States could be ready for the secretary of defense to look over within days, according to Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell.

The review was ordered by Secretary Robert Gates after President Obama asked for more information on the Pentagon’s longstanding policy of barring media from viewing the coffins as they come into Dover Air Force base in Delaware. At a news conference Friday, Morrell said a good deal of input was required from a number of sources, including Pentagon offices representing family interests, the Defense Department’s public affairs office and the various service branches. “The secretary is looking to determine whether or not we can devise a process at Dover that is also able to best balance … the desires of the families — some families may not desire privacy — as well as the American people,” he said. Pentagon officials say some families have said they want the return of their family members’ remains to be private. Advocates of opening the base to coverage say the unmarked, flag-draped coffins make it impossible to identify specific remains. Pentagon officials, however, say it is not too hard these days to tell who is coming home. “Thankfully, we are in a situation now where far fewer war dead are returning, from Iraq in particular,” Morrell said. “And, for example, this week we had four soldiers killed up in north in Mosul, in an [improvised explosive device] attack. So in all likelihood, four caskets are going to be coming home from Iraq into Dover in the near future.” He said the secretary of defense has long been interested in looking at this policy and has been asking how other countries balance media coverage and family requests. “The secretary is one who believes that perhaps we should be relooking at this,” Morrell said. “Can we find a way to better balance an individual family’s privacy concerns with the right of the American people to honor these fallen heroes, as well And so we’re in the process of working that out.”

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G7 ministers focus on stabilizing world economy

World Bank President Robert Zoellick listens Friday at a meeting of the Council for Italy and the U.S. in Rome.
Finance ministers from the world’s leading industrialized nations were holding their second and last day of meetings in Rome on Saturday with an agenda squarely focused on the world financial crisis.

Italy is hosting the meeting of the Group of Seven in its role as G7 president for 2009. G7 members are the United States, Germany, Japan, France, Italy, Britain, and Canada. The agenda drawn up by Rome calls for adopting global measures and economic policy reforms capable of stabilizing the world economy and ensuring transparency to allow markets to function correctly, according to the Italian news agency ANSA. Italy will also call on countries to to avoid resorting to protectionist measures to placate domestic demands, ANSA reported. New U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is making his international debut in Rome. His visit comes just after the U.S. Senate gave final approval to a $787 billion recovery package to boost the U.S. economy. Another attendee, International Monetary Fund head Dominique Strauss-Kahn, said this week that he supports such stimulus packages for advanced countries. “The question is no more to convince the governments to move today, but for them to implement the policies they need to manage,” Strauss-Kahn said.

He also warned of the dangers of protectionism, which he said may still come “through the back door, especially in the financial sector.” Other G7 attendees include Angel Gurria, secretary-general of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, and central bank governors.

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Making Reading Writing and Recession Work Together

Making Reading Writing and Recession Work Together

With books tucked neatly on the shelves and a comfy purple-dragon rug in a back-corner nook, the library at San Diego’s Willard B. Hage Elementary School is the perfect place for children to fall in love with reading. Since the start of the school year, however, the library has been off-limits to students, who get to go there only when teachers can escort them and handle the record-keeping. “With all of the cutbacks we’ve had in the last few years, the district can’t pay for someone to help check out books,” explains Pam Wiesenberg, a third-grade teacher at the school. “As a result, the children suffer.”

As the national economy continues to nose-dive, a growing number of public schools have found themselves facing similar situations — and making more and more painful cutbacks. Advanced Placement programs, extra help for English learners, art, music and summer school could be on the chopping block in many places. Ditto for efforts to reduce class size. The gargantuan federal stimulus package should offer some relief to desperate districts; the House and Senate are haggling over versions that include at least $80 billion for education programs, a significant bump up from the Education Department’s $59 billion discretionary budget for fiscal 2008. But there’s a catch: a big chunk of the stimulus money that is designed to prevent massive teacher layoffs will be awarded only to states that spend at least as much on education as they did in 2006 — a tall order given that a minimum of 42 states are facing significant budget gaps. At least 20 states have already cut their K-12 budgets. Moreover, even with the federal stimulus money, school districts will still get the bulk of their funding from state and local coffers, which haven’t been this low in decades. As Randall Moody, manager of federal advocacy for the National Education Association, says, “When you have 40 states with serious budget issues and that’s where schools get the bulk of their money, naturally there’s going to be a problem.” Budget woes are perhaps most acute in California. The state, the most populous in the U.S., spends about $48 billion a year on K-12 education, or nearly half its general fund, which receives revenue from a variety of sources, including income and sales taxes. This year, however, the double whammy of endless layoffs and an imploding real estate market has decimated the fund, with legislators projecting a $42 billion deficit by the middle of next year. To help bridge this gap, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has proposed shorting schools $2.1 billion during the rest of this academic year and $3.1 billion the next. He wants to save an additional $1.1 billion by reducing the number of school days, from 180 to 175. Though the extra time off might cheer students, California school superintendent Jack O’Connell strenuously opposes the move. Best sound bite: “To close the achievement gap and prepare all students for success in the competitive global economy, we should be offering more time in class, not less.” Despite Congress’s holding emergency weekend sessions to push through a stimulus plan, educators in many states lament the fact that schools won’t see a penny of the extra money until at least July. According to O’Connell, some of California’s poorest districts are running out of cash for subsidized meal programs. The Hayward district is planning layoffs that would increase class size in primary grades from 20 students to 32. In Lake Elsinore, schools have turned off the lights in many rooms — and placed duct tape over the switches — to save money on electricity bills. See pictures of the college dorm’s evolution.

See TIME’s special report on paying for college.

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Bucking tradition, Clinton to head for Asia

Bill Clinton looks at his wife Secretary of State Hillary Clinton as she is sworn in on February 2.
Bucking tradition, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will bypass Europe and travel to Asia on her maiden voyage overseas, diplomats familiar with the planning said Tuesday.

Clinton is expected to visit China, Japan and South Korea on her first trip overseas. The diplomats said she may also add other stops, including one in Southeast Asia. The diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity because Clinton’s schedule was still being finalized. The State Department has not commented on her travel plans. Making Asia Clinton’s first overseas destination illustrates the Obama administration’s desire for a broader partnership with China and its commitment to resolving the North Korean nuclear issue, as well as strengthening ties with Tokyo and Seoul, the diplomats said. The White House said President Barack Obama told Chinese President Hu Jintao in a Friday phone call that he looked forward to “to early contacts and exchanges between senior officials of our two countries.” Clinton told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last month she hoped to make an early trip to Southeast Asia, in particular Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation where Obama spent part of his childhood. Clinton said she wanted to restart Peace Corps programs there, which were suspended in the 1960s.

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Traditionally U.S. secretaries of state make Europe or the Middle East their first official trip overseas. But given that Vice President Joseph Biden is headed to Europe this week for a security conference in Germany, and special envoy George Mitchell is currently in the Middle East, Clinton is free to break with tradition. However British Foreign Secretary David Miliband and German Foreign Secretary Walter Steinmeier will be Clinton’s first foreign guests to the State Department on Tuesday. Clinton was sworn in as America’s 67th secretary of state on Monday — for a second time. Watch Clinton being sworn in »

Biden administered the oath to Clinton in a ceremonial star-studded gathering at the State Department, with actor Chevy Chase and designer Oscar de la Renta among those on hand. “It is an overwhelming honor … to assume this position,” Clinton said. “We have a lot of work to do [to ensure that] America’s future can be even brighter than our storied past.”

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Seeing crash reports can worsen flying phobia

The risk of dying in a jet crash has been estimated to be one in 70 million, according to an MIT analysis.
When she heard news of the Continental Airlines plane that plunged into a house in suburban Buffalo, New York, on Thursday night, killing 50 people, Jenny Gomez experienced a familiar feeling creep deep within her psyche. "It definitely sparked those old feelings of anxiety," she said.

Gomez, 31 and a mother of two, was never afraid to fly during her childhood and early adolescence. “I had flown all my life since I was very small, getting on a plane to visit my grandparents at least a couple of times a year, and I was fine,” she remembered. Then, in her late adolescence, the panicky feelings began, slowly at first, but then the anxiety and nervousness started to snowball. “Every bump, every shake of the plane would set me off.” Finally, during a college psychology class, she realized she fit the classic criteria for someone with a fear of flying, also known as aviophobia or aviatophobia. For five years, Gomez avoided flying altogether. “I missed out on some really cool things in my life back then because I wouldn’t get on an airplane,” she said. An estimated 10 percent to 25 percent of the U.S. population experiences the phobia of flying, according to the American Psychological Association. In contrast, the risk of dying in a jet crash has been estimated to be one in 70 million, according to MIT statistician Arnold Barnett, who has performed statistical analyses for the Federal Aviation Administration. Among the causes for aviatophobia is what many will experience as a result of seeing reports about the crash near Buffalo: vicarious trauma. This is trauma that one observes and subsequently develops within based on that observation. “They see it, and they imagine what would that be like if it happened to me,” said anxiety disorder psychologist R. Reid Wilson. By focusing on the possibility instead of the actual probability of the plane crashing, someone who’s vulnerable to such fears can grow even more anxious about flying, he said.

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The fear of flying constitutes one of the two most common fears humans grapple with (the other one being fear of public speaking), said Wilson, who served as lead psychologist for American Airlines’ first national program for fear of flying. Gomez’s development of the phobia later in life is not unusual either, Wilson said; the average age of onset is 27, which is relatively old compared with when most other phobias begin. Some people who are subject to vicarious trauma actually see the crash scene in the media and actively put themselves in the scenario. Wilson has seen patients who fixate on visualizing themselves in the plane and who go so far as to seek out information such as how long the plane fell through the sky so they can intensify the reality of the experience in their minds. “They get wrapped up in what is actually happening. Your body reacts to what you’re seeing,” he said. Another cause of the condition is the perception of a non-dangerous event — such as turbulence or normal sounds that planes make — as being an actual threat to one’s safety. Many people afraid to fly actually have panic disorder, which is an anxiety disorder characterized by unexpected and repeated episodes of intense fear accompanied by physical symptoms. Having what Wilson refers to as a “constellation of other fears” could also contribute to the phobia of flying; claustrophobia, fear of death and being afraid of turning control over to the pilot could all contribute to the ultimate fear of the not-so-friendly skies. Visit CNNhealth.com, your connection for better living Overcoming the fear of flying begins with a solid trust in the aviation industry and the ability of the plane, the pilot and everyone involved in the safety of the flight to be competent. “If it’s about someone else, then you have no control, but if you shift your feelings of fear to yourself, then you can do something about it,” Wilson said. Relaxation, meditation and breathing skills can improve the chances of surmounting one’s distress. Distractions, such as having someone to talk to on the plane or focusing on an engrossing book, can also work to ease the tension. However, changing one’s mind about the extreme unlikelihood that something would go wrong is key; relaxation and distractions serve as additional support systems. A licensed mental health professional can aid individuals seeking help to beat the fear of flying.

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Hypnotism can work too, especially when administered by someone trained in anxiety disorders. Virtual reality therapy, wherein a helmet is worn to simulate the experience of flying, has also been proved an effective technique, but the institutions providing virtual reality therapies are few and far between. In 2005, Gomez reached a crossroads. Her new job description would require her to travel frequently. A licensed counselor herself, she knew she could avail the services of a specialist to help her get past her fears. Perhaps the most useful part of her course of therapy, she reveals, was developing an understanding of the science behind aviation. “If I was sitting in the cockpit, I would have had no problems at all. It’s the lack of control, sitting in the back of the plane, that would get to me, so when I learned what all the sounds were and how unlikely it would be that the plane would actually fall out of the sky, that’s what really helped me.” Another aid that worked for Gomez was Xanax, a drug often prescribed by doctors to provide temporary relief from the stress of flying. Working as a mild tranquilizer, Xanax, Valium and other benzodiazepine class drugs do not remove the underlying fear but instead work to dull the sensations. When Gomez finally started to fly again, she began with Xanax, a glass of wine and a meditation CD that she would listen to during the entire flight. Her anxiety progressively subsided over the course of a year and a half of regular flying for work. “With each successful flight, I would need less and less help from the pills or the wine,” she said. Finally, she let go of the medication and alcohol altogether and allowed her sense of trust to keep her calm.

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Why Chemical Warfare Is Ancient History

Why Chemical Warfare Is Ancient History

The prospect of chemical and biological warfare in this age of anthrax scares and WMD can feel — like the threat of nuclear Armageddon before it — like a uniquely modern terror. But a British archaeologist’s recent find offers a reminder that chemical weapons are nothing new — in fact, they are nearly 2,000 years old. Simon James, a researcher at the University of Leicester in the U.K., claims to have found the first physical evidence of chemical weaponry, dating from a battle fought in A.D. 256 at an ancient Roman fortress. James concluded that 20 Roman soldiers unearthed beneath the town’s ramparts did not die of war wounds, as previous archaeologists had assumed, but from poison gas.

The findings, announced in January at a meeting of the Archaeological
Institute of America in Philadelphia, have caused a stir in archaeological circles, bringing to light proof of deeds usually encountered just in classical texts. Conducting a CSI-style cold-case forensic analysis of the site, James pieced together clues from records of earlier excavations at the Roman city of Dura-Europos, whose ruins are in modern Syria. An army of Persians had sacked the city and abandoned it, deporting its captive population deep into Persian territory. Dura-Europos became a ghost town, engulfed in sand until joint French-American teams dug it up in the 1930s.

During the final siege of the city, the attackers burrowed beneath the walls in order to breach the Roman defenses; the Romans heard this and started digging a countermine to fend off the assault. But the Persians, James told TIME, “prepared a nasty surprise,” pumping lethal fumes from a brazier burning sulfur crystals and bitumen, a tarlike substance, with bellows into the Roman tunnels. The brazier was only doused, James suggests, “when the screaming stopped.” Afterward, the Persians stacked the Roman corpses in a wall to prevent any reprisal, then lit the scene on fire.

War in antiquity rarely matched the heroism of its myths — it was ugly, nasty and desperate. To stave off a Roman siege in A.D. 189, the defenders of the Greek city of Ambracia built a complex flamethrower that coughed out smoking chicken feathers. At Themiscrya, another stubborn Greek outpost, Romans tunneling beneath the city contended with not only a charge of wild beasts but also a barrage of hives swarming with bees — a rather direct approach to biological warfare.

The Romans themselves had few qualms about incorporating chemical warfare into their tactics. Roman armies routinely poisoned the wells of cities they were besieging, particularly when campaigning in western Asia. According to the historian Plutarch, the Roman general Sertorius in 80 B.C. had his troops pile mounds of gypsum powder by the hillside hideaways of Spanish rebels. When kicked up by a strong northerly wind, the dust became a severe irritant, smoking the insurgents out of their caves. The use of such special agents “was very tempting,” says Adrienne Mayor, a classical folklorist and author of Greek Fire, Poison Arrows & Scorpion Bombs: Biological & Chemical Warfare in the Ancient World, “especially when you don’t consider the enemy fully human.”

Unconventional methods were used by both antiquity’s weak and strong. In 332
B.C., the citizens of the doomed port of Tyre catapulted basins of burning sand at Alexander the Great’s advancing army. Falling from the sky, the sand, says Mayor, “would have had the same ghastly effect as white phosphorus,” the chemical agent allegedly used during Israel’s recent bombardment of Gaza, not far to the south of ancient Tyre. A Chinese ruler in A.D. 178 put down a peasant revolt by encircling the rebels with chariots heaped with limestone powder. Accompanied by a cacophonous troupe of drummers, the charioteers pumped the powder into a primitive tear gas even more corrosive and lethal than its modern equivalent. The peasants didn’t stand a chance.

Still, in the absence of the Geneva Conventions, ancient peoples did maintain “some sense of what it was to cross the line,” says Mayor. Across cultures, it was customary to deplore trickery and extol the virtues of the noble warrior. The Brahmanic Laws of Manu, a code of Hindu principles first articulated in the fifth century B.C., forbade the use of arrows tipped with fire or poison. Written in India a century later, Kautilya’s Arthashastra, one of the world’s earliest treatises on war and realpolitik, advocates surprise night raids and offers recipes for plague-generating toxins, but it also urges princes to exercise restraint and win the hearts and minds of their foes. The Roman military historian Florus denounced a commander for sabotaging an enemy’s water supply, saying the act “violated the laws of heaven and the practice of our forefathers.”

Even in antiquity, many feared the lurking consequences of unleashing what we now call chemical weapons — indeed, the ancient Greek tale of Pandora’s box offers a continuing metaphor for their use. And its moral proved true in the collapsed tunnels of Dura-Europos: among the Roman bodies, James spied one corpse set aside from the rest, which wore differing armor and carried a jade-hilted sword. This was a fallen Persian soldier, James concludes, also asphyxiated by the gas. The warrior who released the poison very likely succumbed to it.

See pictures of the Cold War’s influence on art.

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A Brief History Of: Ponzi Schemes

A Brief History Of: Ponzi Schemes

The prospect of chemical and biological warfare in this age of anthrax scares and WMD can feel — like the threat of nuclear Armageddon before it — like a uniquely modern terror. But a British archaeologist’s recent find offers a reminder that chemical weapons are nothing new — in fact, they are nearly 2,000 years old. Simon James, a researcher at the University of Leicester in the U.K., claims to have found the first physical evidence of chemical weaponry, dating from a battle fought in A.D. 256 at an ancient Roman fortress. James concluded that 20 Roman soldiers unearthed beneath the town’s ramparts did not die of war wounds, as previous archaeologists had assumed, but from poison gas.

The findings, announced in January at a meeting of the Archaeological
Institute of America in Philadelphia, have caused a stir in archaeological circles, bringing to light proof of deeds usually encountered just in classical texts. Conducting a CSI-style cold-case forensic analysis of the site, James pieced together clues from records of earlier excavations at the Roman city of Dura-Europos, whose ruins are in modern Syria. An army of Persians had sacked the city and abandoned it, deporting its captive population deep into Persian territory. Dura-Europos became a ghost town, engulfed in sand until joint French-American teams dug it up in the 1930s.

During the final siege of the city, the attackers burrowed beneath the walls in order to breach the Roman defenses; the Romans heard this and started digging a countermine to fend off the assault. But the Persians, James told TIME, “prepared a nasty surprise,” pumping lethal fumes from a brazier burning sulfur crystals and bitumen, a tarlike substance, with bellows into the Roman tunnels. The brazier was only doused, James suggests, “when the screaming stopped.” Afterward, the Persians stacked the Roman corpses in a wall to prevent any reprisal, then lit the scene on fire.

War in antiquity rarely matched the heroism of its myths — it was ugly, nasty and desperate. To stave off a Roman siege in A.D. 189, the defenders of the Greek city of Ambracia built a complex flamethrower that coughed out smoking chicken feathers. At Themiscrya, another stubborn Greek outpost, Romans tunneling beneath the city contended with not only a charge of wild beasts but also a barrage of hives swarming with bees — a rather direct approach to biological warfare.

The Romans themselves had few qualms about incorporating chemical warfare into their tactics. Roman armies routinely poisoned the wells of cities they were besieging, particularly when campaigning in western Asia. According to the historian Plutarch, the Roman general Sertorius in 80 B.C. had his troops pile mounds of gypsum powder by the hillside hideaways of Spanish rebels. When kicked up by a strong northerly wind, the dust became a severe irritant, smoking the insurgents out of their caves. The use of such special agents “was very tempting,” says Adrienne Mayor, a classical folklorist and author of Greek Fire, Poison Arrows & Scorpion Bombs: Biological & Chemical Warfare in the Ancient World, “especially when you don’t consider the enemy fully human.”

Unconventional methods were used by both antiquity’s weak and strong. In 332
B.C., the citizens of the doomed port of Tyre catapulted basins of burning sand at Alexander the Great’s advancing army. Falling from the sky, the sand, says Mayor, “would have had the same ghastly effect as white phosphorus,” the chemical agent allegedly used during Israel’s recent bombardment of Gaza, not far to the south of ancient Tyre. A Chinese ruler in A.D. 178 put down a peasant revolt by encircling the rebels with chariots heaped with limestone powder. Accompanied by a cacophonous troupe of drummers, the charioteers pumped the powder into a primitive tear gas even more corrosive and lethal than its modern equivalent. The peasants didn’t stand a chance.

Still, in the absence of the Geneva Conventions, ancient peoples did maintain “some sense of what it was to cross the line,” says Mayor. Across cultures, it was customary to deplore trickery and extol the virtues of the noble warrior. The Brahmanic Laws of Manu, a code of Hindu principles first articulated in the fifth century B.C., forbade the use of arrows tipped with fire or poison. Written in India a century later, Kautilya’s Arthashastra, one of the world’s earliest treatises on war and realpolitik, advocates surprise night raids and offers recipes for plague-generating toxins, but it also urges princes to exercise restraint and win the hearts and minds of their foes. The Roman military historian Florus denounced a commander for sabotaging an enemy’s water supply, saying the act “violated the laws of heaven and the practice of our forefathers.”

Even in antiquity, many feared the lurking consequences of unleashing what we now call chemical weapons — indeed, the ancient Greek tale of Pandora’s box offers a continuing metaphor for their use. And its moral proved true in the collapsed tunnels of Dura-Europos: among the Roman bodies, James spied one corpse set aside from the rest, which wore differing armor and carried a jade-hilted sword. This was a fallen Persian soldier, James concludes, also asphyxiated by the gas. The warrior who released the poison very likely succumbed to it.

See pictures of the Cold War’s influence on art.

Share